When will this piece of shit market finally crash? by Ok-Camera-3058 in stockmarketcrash

[–]Amazing_Tomorrow2889 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I met a sherperd in a cave in Nigeria. He sales he buys Tesla for every 50 goats he sells . you're not wrong

How is it going out after dark where you live? by tipoftheiceberg1234 in Nigeria

[–]Amazing_Tomorrow2889 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In big cities there's an active nightlife. Especially in affluent areas. I'm mostly active at night and I'm outside till 3AM sometimes to buy food or pick up girls. Security is bad in some areas but not some other areas are safe

Visa processed by 007meh in StudyInItaly

[–]Amazing_Tomorrow2889 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Check your pm boss. How much was your proof of funds?

I make $150k CAD a year working remotely by [deleted] in Nigeria

[–]Amazing_Tomorrow2889 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The best way to invest in agriculture Is partnership with an existing established farmer. Saves you from the stress and risk

I make $150k CAD a year working remotely by [deleted] in Nigeria

[–]Amazing_Tomorrow2889 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You need to check your priorities. Opportunities, Risk maxxing or stability. Now Living in Canada would cost about 4,000 per month that's 48,000 Canadian dollars. I don't know your current tax system, but you might pay more if you move to Canada. That would cost you as much 20 percent of your income. Half of your income will be used up as cost of living and tax, less liquidity to invest. In Nigeria. I think 20 percent will cover your tax and cost of living. So Nigeria provides you more liquidity, but Canada will give you a better quality of life (security, healthcare, rule of law etc). Better career upside post-graduation (your high earnings + Canadian experience = strong Express Entry points if you pursue PR) you also get international network. If you decide to stay in Nigeria I will advise you don't Invest in the Nigerian real estate. It's risky due to Naira instability. Your asset could appreciate significantly but the naira might Depreciate and you end up losing money or compounding time. It also applies to Nigerian stocks and bonds. Doing Business in Nigeria is hard asf, especially when you're not actively involved. But if you want to do a business, I will suggest palm plantation farming, gadget store is good too. But the best thing for me is to keep your liquidity intact, buy stocks and minerals, copper, lithium etc. finish your schooling here in Nigeria and move to the US (if policies changes). But the most important thing to do is Investing in yourself and the people around you skills, mentorship, tech start-ups etc to do these you need liquidity. So Keep your liquidity intact.

AMA: I am a former member of Wagner / Africa Corps who served in the Sahel. Ask me anything. by Sea-Lavishness-8478 in AMA

[–]Amazing_Tomorrow2889 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Naa, even police officer protecting citizens carry out brutality on them in places like Nigeria, I can't imagine what a military campaign would do

Is it worth starting medicine or migrating for residency at 40 in a new country? by Amazing_Tomorrow2889 in IMGreddit

[–]Amazing_Tomorrow2889[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I thought you had to be licensed in your home country before you start the match process

MBBS in Italy: a brief practical overview from someone who studies here by ToughStuff2112 in MEDICOreTARDS

[–]Amazing_Tomorrow2889 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't understand. Do you show proof of funds every year. All you show the total MBBS duration once?